FONTANA – The end of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Auto Club Speedway was pretty much the same scene from Daytona.

Only this time, Kyle Busch was out in front of Todd Bodine and Johnny Benson. Ron Hornaday Jr. and Terry Cook crashed the party, but there were no fiery crashes, no singed drivers to add any excitement to Saturday’s San Bernardino County 200, the second race of the Truck Series season.

Busch won an uneventful race that had only one truck spin out and slightly tap an infield wall. That was on the fourth lap.

“We had a good truck and had a lot of fun,” said Busch, driver of the No. 51 Toyota Tundra for Billy Ballew Motorsports.

“Bodine had a good run, too. He had a good truck, took the lead, but we were able to fight back. Coming through the field like that at the beginning, overall a great day.”

Busch started the race in 20th and moved his way into the lead on lap 23. He led for 35 laps before surrendering it to Bodine on lap 58.

But after the last round of pit stops, Busch regained the lead and won the race, taking the lead for good on lap 90.

It was quite a different race than the season opener at Daytona International Speedway where P.J. Jones escaped a fiery crash that affected a number of drivers, including Busch. But Busch rallied back into contention only to fall short.

Bodine won at Daytona, with Busch second and Benson finishing third.

At Auto Club Speedway, Bodine was second behind Busch with Benson in third in a race that had more cautions for debris (two) than for crashes (one), and the only real excitement came during the last round of pit stops.

For Busch, it was a win seven years in the making. He was supposed to make his Truck Series debut at this track, when it was called California Speedway, in 2001. But NASCAR changed the age limit of its drivers right before the race and Busch, 16 at the time, was not allowed to race.

Since then, Busch has won four Cup races, including one at Auto Club Speedway, and has made the Chase for the Cup two times.

It was another strong race for Toyota, which had four of the top five trucks in the race. Bodine, Benson and Terry Cook, who finished fourth, drive Toyotas.

“We just went to work,” said Bodine, driver of the No. 30 Toyota Tundra for Germain Racing. “We tried to figure out what we were missing last year. We have got a pretty good handle on it. I’m not going to say it’s perfect, but we have got a good handle on it.”

Benson had to rally through the field like Busch to finish third.

Hornaday, last year’s Truck Series champ, was fifth in a much-needed rebound from Daytona, where he had mechanical problems and finished 25th.